I've been caregiver for my mother-in-law for 6 years now. She has many health problems, and has wanted to die for a couple of years now. Well, she is finally on hospice, and I know this will sound terrible - but I'm so tired of the rollercoaster ride! They keep telling us she is showing signs that she's close to dying and she's barely moving/talking, etc., but then a couple of days later, she's perked back up and talking, drinking and eating. Then she starts declining and it starts all over again. I know only God knows when we die, but this slow death is so sad and frustrating! And needless to also say it's also frustrating to see her grandkids that she raised and hardly never visited her are showing up and acting all sad and caring about her now. UGH! Anybody got any suggestions as to what helps to keep you from going nuts?
Hospice can definitely be a roller coaster ride! All we can do is take each day as it comes and provide love and comfort. Don't fret too much over her grandkids. You take care of your actions and let them do their thing. If it helps you to feel less frustrated, give them the benefit of the doubt and hope they have come to the belated realization that they should honor this woman.
Just a day ago, the doctor decided to put him on steroids for inflamation ( final stage copd ) as well as some cough syrup. Meanwhile, they are telling me not much longer or it's hard to tell how he will actually pass.
Hospice has been a godsend, esp., the aid that bathes him.
He had a very good day yesterday, very little coughing and hacking, and then out of the blue, he tells the meds. are " messing with my feelings". So, trying to have a genuine conversation with him is impossible. Me, calmly telling him that it is normal to feel depressed and anxious. That conversation went no where.
Got the nurse to speak to him on the phone......long story short, off the cough syrup.
The entire time he has been on hospice, he has battled with me and the nurses about his medication; either not taking them at all, or taking too many, or not taking enough......just depends on the drug.
The thing that I have learned throughout the last two and a half years, is just because someone gets a life limiting disease, does not mean that person will change. Some people do explore old wounds and make up, or have good and true conversations about the experience, but not everyone. And, until an individual can face reality and actually experience their feelings, there are no meaningful and loving times at the end.
I feel sorry for my husband and his dad, that they could not discuss issues that were pretty bad years ago.
Denial is where they are at, and there is not a thing I can do about it.
No one comes to visit my fil either. Not his daughters, grandkids. I don't get it, other than he was not a good parent and never got close with his grandchildren. It's all too sad.
I just try to take one day at a time and ignore a lot of wht my fil says, because most of it repitition of the weather or him yelling and micro manage everything I do.
Hospice focuses on the quality of a patient's days, rather than the number of their days.
VW - For many of us, death is visualized by what we have seen in the media. The drama of the massive heart attack and they keel over dead; the gunshot dead and the pool of blood. Just think of all the TV series that start off with the dead body. But the reality of death from is far from that. It is a long march with period of rally's but it eventually comes. For my MIL, she went into a free-standing hospice facility from a hospital discharge (after about a weeks stay). She had been in a NH prior and had been on hospice at the NH but she was then what I like to call the "Bataan Death March Hospice Style" - just a long slow decline with cognitive peaks now & then. Most of the others at the free-standing hospice facility (had been a hospital) were cancer patients and looked very, very bad. Visually you just knew they were close to death. But the end stage dementia patients still look just so good, so it's hard to realize that they too are close to death. It's not easy. I'm assuming that your MIL is still @ home and that is where she is on hospice? If so, you might speak with her hospice group to see if she could go to a facility based hospice for her end stage care - if you have them in your area. My mom is in a NH and not on hospice but when the day comes for that level of care, she has signed off on which hopsice group to be affliated with (VITAS). VITAS was chosen because they have a facility in her city and for us this makes the most sense for our approach to her care plan. Again none of this is easy and you are doing the best you can.
The only problems we had were related to my mother's mental issues and in no way the fault of the hospice. We were going to have hospice for him at home, but Mom's ocd and paranoia made that impossible. Even at the hospice she made it far more difficult. The staff did an incredible job of making his last days comfortable, the only complications were caused by Mom's issues.
Have you ever had a loved one on Hospice Care, where you could see up close and personal what they actually do?
vw9729, Hang in there! That roller coaster ride is all a part of the process. My husband was on Hospice 5 weeks. Some days he ate, and some days he didn't. Some days he was remarkably lucid and some days he talked gibberish. He had a nice breakfast and was fairly comfortable and lucid on the day he died. We can't really speed up or slow down the natural process. It will be when it will be.
I can understand where you are coming from, but not all hospice workers feel or act the same way. Infact the hospice nurse that sees my fil, is on the opposite end of meds., and fells as little as necessary. There was actually one nurse who came, felt the amount of morphine he was receiving was not enough, as he was/ is an everyday/heavy drinker. She explained that any type of addiction or even past trauma, may make a person more tolerant of morphine. When my mother went to the care facility, same converstaion with the doctor ( my mother was addicted to zanax and was a survivior of severe domestic violence )
I do feel good nutrition is one of the best medicines. But, I have to laugh when I think of my fil giving up sugar and refined foods., and actually eating fresh foods.
One thing that does bug me about hospice are their views on drinking alcohol. They say just let him do it, what difference does it make now? Let's see, combing alcohol with morphine and sedatives equals a big time fall soon!
(My mom now uses e-cigarettes. Not for her health but to eliminate all the burns in the furniture!)
I don't know if alcohol is in the same category. But I do understand where the hospice nurse is coming from on that. Their job is to keep the patient comfortable, not to reform their bad habits. Of course, you are entitled to make your decisions your own decisions for your loved one. Just listen to the hospice reasons and then do what you think best.
Most persons having problems don't particularly have the problem of a dying relative but in particular a dying relative that won't do the right thing.
As a parent myself I don't have a right if I am sick to take others down with me but a great many people don't have that viewpoint and that in my opinion is the problem. Death is big business and gets way too much attention. The hospice community fundamentally does not work well with the doctors and the doctors don't work well with the assisted living facility and the assisted living facility does not work well with hospice and on and on. Why would they? It would not serve the bottom line. Lets be real and honest for just a second shall we? We go on and upon death we will be shortly in a new body, whether you believe this or not is not relevant. All of us taking care of a sick relative whom we love have a responsibility to help that sick relative but the person that should always be in charge is the well person not the sick person for sure. So, the solution is to take care of the loved one on the schedule of the person that is well and if the sick person wants it done their way and that person is not amenable to the well persons way no matter how much reason is used then that sick person has an extra major problem which is not solvable in this comment but it would be my opinion to let them alone if needed until they make an honest change for the good of all. Does no good to yourself go down with the infirm.
What does the administrator of the facility say when she/he is asked this question? Have you called the Ombudsman?